who think they might be having a good night. easy, easy. right. easy but but but. a court leaving the ballot open, diane, saying there are lines there in this race that we know is unusually competitive. it means you keep watching it. now let s come back to where we are as we wait. we still have no votes in in mississippi. we do here for another one. again, in this tough national climate for democrats, you have an incumbent democratic governor in a very red state, 56% of the vote in now. right. i told you earlier, watch down here. and a lot of them are starting to slowly fill in. right. these are the conservative counties. but daniel cameron getting only 51% of the vote there. let s just go back in time to 2019. andy beshear getting 46. so the incumbent did a little better. but here s what you look at here. go back to the presidential race. donald trump getting 74% here. and so the margins, the margins are not going daniel cameron s way. if you know that in the urban areas tha
the moment? this positive outlook is the moment? this positive outlook is being the moment? this positive outlook is being fuelled . the moment? this positive outlook is being fuelled by| the moment? this positive - outlook is being fuelled by the utility set, the finance and business service sector which of course represents over 70% of course represents over 70% of our uk gdp. and the index we re getting from those sectors is plus 46. anything over zero is a very positive index because it tells us the number of employers are looking to increase the size of their workforce. we think the utility sector is looking for more people because they haven t been able to get into people public houses and do metre readings or upgrade metres and of course the finance of business services sector is being fuelled by generally the economy waking up and looking forward with more confidence. in terms of the utility sector there is a huge backlog there was not that must be true in other industries
race is no longer about one or two people. it s about a group of four and mayor pete just busted in that, specifically in iowa. he s up 14 points sense august. the same names all at the top in new hampshire as well. but with buttigieg, the question becomes why? why is he making this move? let s bring in the wiz himself. what do you see, brother, and how s it going? i think this is rather key in terms of understanding why certain things are happening and these are the net favoritability ratings. what do we see now? we see the most popular guy in iowa is pete buttigieg with a plus 63 point net favorability rating. look at the warren line here. she was the most popular candidate back in september in our own poll. she s dropped from plus 58% down to plus 46. so it pretty clear here as i look underneath the numbers that
well. but with buttigieg, the question becomes why. why is he making this move? let s bring in the whiz. he gives us the answers. what do you see and how is it going? i think this is rather key in terms of understanding why certain things are happening. these are the net favorability ratings. we see the most popular guy in iowa is buttigieg with plus 63 point net favorability rating. that s up from september. here is also key. look at the warren line here. she was the most favorite, now he s down to plus 46. so, it s pretty clear as i look underneath the numbers that warren is losing popularity while buttigieg is gaining. sanders also takes a bump and that s interesting because help me understand this. so, you re getting a bump for senator sanders up 10 points in popularity. but she s going down but they re making the same message.
bill de blasio about likability. one thing that struck us in the recent poll this week, if you look on the korean aboscreen ab favorability increases. biden is ahead of everything. harris is plus 49. elizabeth warren, plus 46. i mention that because it s not always the case that the female candidates are doing so well on the notion of likability. make electability, maybe being competent, but not likability. is that a shift, do you think? a welcomed shift for women in general? i think we ll take what we can get, yeah. i think it s definitely a welcomed shift, and i think it speaks to the fact that elizabeth warren is playing a slow but steady race. she s climbing in the polls. she s sticking to the fact she s going big on policies. she s proposing solutions for crises we re facing. she s acknowledging every constituency including young people who are going to feel her